While working on an earlier chess piece placement problem, I happened to come across a silly (but somewhat interesting) configuration:
The board size is 5x5 squares
There are 16 pieces of the same colour:
4 rooks
4 bishops
8 knights
Each piece is attacked by exactly 1 other piece. (Maybe "pr...

But while you're here @Rubio, I've had a couple comment flags pending on comments that were imported from the dice puzzle when it was merged that referenced the old OP of the puzzle who is no longer the OP of the puzzle for a couple days... Just curious why those are taking so long when I thought it was a relatively simple case :P

A snood () is historically a type of female headgear designed to hold the hair in a cloth or yarn bag. In the most common form the headgear resembles a close-fitting hood worn over the back of the head. It is similar to a hairnet, but snoods typically have a looser fit, a much coarser mesh, and noticeably thicker yarn. A tighter-mesh band may cover the forehead or crown, then run behind the ears and under the nape of the neck. A sack of sorts dangles from this band, covering and containing the fall of long hair gathered at the back. A snood sometimes was made of solid fabric, but more often of...

Arrange numbers 1 to 20 to the rose petals with rules :
Yellow petals contains odd numbers, and white petals contains even numbers.
The outer petals are the difference or addition of the inner petals.
some numbers have been there as guide.
Example
Solve this

Easiest might be pastebin.com. Anyone who reads this will be able to read it, but you can time-limit it to 10 minutes and I don't think the consequences are too awful if some unscrupulous person gets a head start.

In the calm and peaceful Rurdem Town, a series of murders is driving the local police crazy. The local police suspects this to be the deeds of a serial killer. They are right about that: the arrogant psycho got borred, and decided to challenge them. He left behind a note that contain clues about ...

First of all - I have to admit, that I don't know the answer to the question yet. I can tell you the answer to the question Before anything like this comes up: This is taken from a non-competitive website and it is keeping me struggling for over a day now:
Welcome, agent! You have agreed to ...

Okay @micsthepick my notes: 1. I assume you will replace ' C and D' with the actual names? 2. Link doesn't work 3. I like the who is bit but the 'where' - thats going to be easier as there is only two possibilities. 4. Spelling Grammar all seem fine.

In high school, me and my friend Isaac would often send each other cryptic messages titled "meet me". The messages used various ciphers to disguise the content hidden within. Once solved, it would reveal a time and location for us to meet after class. Isaac and I were fairly close friends until ...

@micsthepick sorry had to go. For 3 perhaps add a few more locations? You can just add them in the false people of ‘is not here’ for the truth. It will be better if there are more than two possibilities